Example sentences of "might [adv] have [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The aim was to confine attention to people who had frequent contact with the dementia sufferer , rather than interviewing all nearest relatives , who might or might not have contact with him or her .
2 ‘ If I 'd known my score was 4998 not 496 I might not have runs at all . ’
3 Anyone who has contact with the real world knows that sometimes the management might not have confidence in the work force and the work force might not have confidence in the management .
4 Anyone who has contact with the real world knows that sometimes the management might not have confidence in the work force and the work force might not have confidence in the management .
5 Five minutes , before you start it though now that it might not apply to you , you might not have control over training , and perhaps down the left hand side you put well what methods do they use and you might put the other side then you go back and suggest to your boss will you alright .
6 And however well endowed he was with these qualities , he might still have difficulty on some points .
7 This sliding-scale approach might still have relevance to the Post Office Act , on which that case turned , but it has little to do with obscenity as defined in the 1959 Act .
8 Society might also have views on two other aspects on monopoly performance : the amount of political power that large companies are in a position to exert , and the distributional issue of fairness in relation to the large supernormal profits that a monopolist can earn .
9 Norman Smith , match secretary of Irby Angling Club , reckons that with perfect conditions the Classic champion might even have 80lb of fish .
10 Such employees might well have claims for compensation against the UK government for defective implementation of the Directive , if they can show that , had the restriction not been included in the Regulations , their claim would have succeeded .
11 But any new Warden might well have difficulty in taking over .
12 An eminent nonconformist might well have reservations about a now Anglo-Catholic son seeking holy orders in the Church of England .
13 A and B might well have features in common from the outset ( the c elements in the figure ) and these will produce primary generalization — training on A will give associative strength to stimulus elements that are present also in B. The X representation functions in just the same way as the c elements in producing generalization except for the fact that the ability of A and B to activate X is based on prior conditioning .
14 Of course there are lots of questions which would have to be sorted out — the difference is the Scottish Education system , & the courses offered , for a start — & you might well have doubts about cutting yourself off from your friends & so forth .
15 A jelly might sometimes have lumps of fruit in it , just as space can have lumps of matter in it — the Earth , the Sun , the Moon .
16 For instance , any such book might meaningfully have sections on ‘ Principles ’ and ‘ Systems ’ and the ‘ Principles ’ section might be decomposed into subsections on ‘ Computer Principles ’ and on ‘ Human Principles ’ .
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